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Lionfish update: What we know and where we are going

James A. Morris, Jr. Ph.D. NOAA /NOS National Centers for Coastal Ocean ScienceCenter for Coastal Fisheries and Habitat Researchhttp://www.ccfhr.noaa.gov/stressors/lionfish.aspx

Lionfish invasion status

Schofield et al. 2009; Whitfield et al 2002; 2007, REEF

1985-2000

Present

Documented by CCFHR in 2001 off Beaufort, NC

Lionfish invasion history• Two visually identical species of lionfish were introduced into the Atlantic

via the US aquarium trade beginning in the 1980’s.

• First documented as established off the coast of North Carolina in 2000.

• Widespread in the Southeast U.S., Caribbean, and invading the Gulf of Mexico.

• Expected to invade South America as far south as the northern coast of Argentina.

Lionfish biology

• Live decades and reach sizes up to 47cm (19 inches).

• Inhabit all marine habitat types and depths (shoreline to over 1000’).

• Venomous spines capable of deterring

• Temperature tolerance is approximately ~10 – 35C.

• Sexually mature in less than one year and spawn in pairs.

• A single female lionfish spawns over ~2 million eggs/year.

• Eggs are held together in a gelatinous mass and are dispersed by currents.

• Larval duration is ~25 days.

Lionfish ecology

• Can reach densities higher than 200 adults per acre.

• Generalist carnivores that consume >56 species of fish.

• High affinity for structure but inhabit all most marine habitat types.

• Prey are commercially, recreationally, and ecologically important.

• Native predators have been observed to exhibit avoidance for lionfish.

• Few parasites compared to native species.

• Exhibit site fidelity.

Lionfish Impacts -- Not just another stressor!

• Other stressors have occurred over long time scales – lionfish can cause high impacts in less than four years

• Scale of lionfish impacts is very large – extreme impacts to biodiversity

• Potential interactions with other stressors…– Climate change

– Ocean acidification

– Overfishing

– Coral bleaching

– Anthropogenic pollution

Lionfish ecological impacts• Biodiversity and resilience of coral, hardbottom, and artificial reefs.

• Reduction of ecologically important species such as cleaners, herbivores, and forage fishes.

• Cascading impacts across food webs is possible (e.g., predation on herbivores, increased macroalgae, decreased coral biomass).

• Potential impacts to species of concern (Nassau grouper, Warsaw grouper, speckled hind, striped croaker, Keys silverside).

• The scale of ecological impacts is high in magnitude and geographically broad (North Carolina to the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico).

Socio-economic impacts• Potential impacts to stock rebuilding efforts for commercially important

species.

• Potential reduction of native species catch rates (e.g., lobster trap fisheries).

• Economic losses for commercial fishermen include loss of fishing days when envenomation occurs.

Human health impacts• Lionfish sting symptoms include tachycardia, hypertension, hypotension,

seizures, chest pain, abdominal pain, swelling, pain, and subdermal necrosis at the sting site, and temporary paralysis to all extremities.

• Long term health impacts of repeated envenomations are unknown.

• High densities = high encounter rates.

• Envenomation risk to bathers/swimmers increases at locations with structure such as piers, breakwaters, and confined tidal swimming pools.

Control and management strategies• Control plans that support sustained removals can significantly reduce local

lionfish densities.

• Tools for local lionfish control include commercial harvesting as a food fish, sport tournaments, and adopt-a-reef and other citizen-based removal efforts.

• Lionfish venom may be commercial valuable for biomedical applications.

• Based on current technology, lionfish eradication at the regional scale is likely not feasible given the expansive depths and geography of lionfish habitat.

K. Doody

NOAA’s Eat Lionfish Campaign• Purpose: To encourage fishing pressure on lionfish in local

areas and stimulate U.S. market

• Benefits – control in protected areas, locations with accessible reefs (i.e., some Caribbean islands), economic, and ecological.

• We do not believe that fishing pressure can reduce the entire lionfish population but can control in local areas.

Credit Fred Lentz

• NOAA Lionfish Websitehttp://www.ccfhr.noaa.gov/stressors/lionfish.aspx

• NOAA Lionfish Integrated Assessmenthttp://coastalscience.noaa.gov/documents/lionfish_%20ia2009.pdf

Additional Resources

Questions?